The Measure of a Mountain: Beauty and Terror on Mount Rainier - Bruce Barcott - Books - Blue Star Press - 9781570615214 - April 10, 2007
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The Measure of a Mountain: Beauty and Terror on Mount Rainier

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In The Measure of a Mountain, Seattle writer Bruce Barcott sets out to know Rainier. His method is exploratory, meandering, personal. He begins by encircling it, first by car then on foot. He finds that the mountain is a complex of moss-bearded hemlocks and old-growth firs, high meadows that blossom according to a precise natural timeclock, sheets of crumbling pumice, fractured glaciers, and unsteady magma. Its snow fields bristle with bug life, and its marmots chew rocks to keep their teeth from overgrowing. Rainier rumbles with seismic twitches and jerks—some one-hundred-thirty earthquakes annually. The nightmare among geologists is the unstoppable wall of mud that will come rolling down its slopes when a hunk of mountain falls off, as it does every half century (and we?re fifty years overdue). Rainier is both an obsession and a temple that attracts its own passionate acolytes: scientists, priests, rangers, and mountain guides. Rainier is also a monument to death: every year someone manages just to disappear on its flanks; imperiled climbers and their rescuers perish on glaciers; a planeload of Marines remains lodged in ice since they crashed into the mountain in 1946. Referred to by locals as simply "the mountain," it is the single largest feature of the Pacific Northwest landscape—provided it isn?t hidden in clouds. Visible or not, though, it?s presence is undeniable.


288 pages

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released April 10, 2007
ISBN13 9781570615214
Publishers Blue Star Press
Pages 288
Dimensions 140 × 213 × 15 mm   ·   335 g
Language English  

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